Acupuncture is all placebo and here is why.

Headache

Department of Neurology, Boston Medical Center, Boston University School of Medicine, Boston, MA, USA.

Published: March 2015

Background: Alternative and complementary medicines such as acupuncture remain popular with the general public and many clinicians. The term "integrative medicine" is often now used to describe this type of non-science-based medicine, which has become more of a faith-based method of practice, making it harder to challenge. Acupuncture is commonly used to treat headache along with just about any other symptom and condition known to man.

Discussion: Physicians regularly fall into many misunderstandings when erroneously believing a real effect from acupuncture, when there is none. A perfunctory and poorly informed media contribute to the misinformation. Sixteen logical traps are identified which together explain most of the false reasoning behind the alleged effect of acupuncture.

Conclusion: Practitioners need to do a better job of discerning truth from information and data available on acupuncture.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/head.12524DOI Listing

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